What if Zuckerberg were a Nigerian atheist?
Brand Azuka
Nigeria Today
There are three American
brands that Nigerians patronide hugely: Facebook, Microsoft, and
Apple.
Mark Zuckerberg, co-founder
of Facebook, is an atheist; Bill Gates, founder of Microsoft, is an
agnostic (neither believes nor doubts the existence of God); Steve
Jobs, founder of Apple, was a Zen Buddhist. Yet, Nigerians love
them and patronise their products hugely.
If these three men were
Nigerians who professed atheism, agnosticism and Zen Buddhism
publicly, how would many Nigerians react to them?
Last week, Zuckerberg
visited Nigeria and many Nigerians were drooling over him for
walking and jogging in Lagos. He left for Kenya and was pictured
eating ugali and tilapia with his bare hands. Many Nigerians shared
the photograph and captioned it, “Zuckerberg enjoying Nigerian meal
with his bare hands like a true Nigerian.”
It seemed Aso Rock was not
happy that the young billionaire visited Nigeria without paying a
visit to the Nigerian seat of power; for a day after leaving
Nigeria for Kenya, he returned to Nigeria and visited Abuja, took
groupies with President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice-President Yemi
Osinbajo. The President and the Vice-President were full of smiles
in the pictures they took with Zuckerberg.
What if Zuckerberg were an
atheist and a Nigerian? Or what if Zuckerberg were an adherent of
the African Traditional Religion, which we arrogantly call paganism
or idolatry?
In Nigeria there are ONLY
two religions: Christianity and Islam. Other religions are treated
with contempt by most Nigerians. Even the government at all levels
discriminates against other religions. That is why different levels
of government sponsor only Christian and Muslim pilgrims. The
Federal Government also gives Christians and Muslims special
concessionary dollar rates during pilgrimages, while leaving
companies that manufacture goods to source their dollars at the
prevailing market rates, leading to the shutting down of many
companies and loss of thousands of jobs.
Imagine if a person was
told to pray at a gathering of Nigerian politicians or business
executives in Abuja and the person began to call on “Amadioha” or
“Ogun” and the ancestors. Those in attendance would not wait for
him to finish before protesting and stopping the prayers. But if
the person had prayed the Muslim way, the Christians would say
“amen” at the end of the prayers, even though they don’t understand
the Arabic spoken by the Muslim and don’t share the beliefs of the
Muslims. In the same vein, if a Christian had prayed, the Muslims
would say “amen” even if the Christian ended his prayer with
“through Jesus Christ our Lord”: it would not matter that Muslims
don’t believe in the godhead of Jesus Christ.
Similarly, if a Muslim
offers a Christian meat from the ram killed during sallah, the
Christian would eat. If a Christian offers a Muslim the meat from
the goat killed during Christmas or Easter, the Muslim would accept
and eat. But if an adherent of the ATR offers a Nigerian Muslim or
Christian meat from a ram killed during the festival of Ogwugwu or
Sango, he would most likely reject it or quietly throw it away as
“meat from an animal sacrificed to idols.”
Therefore, the Nigerian
Christian and Muslims have been conditioned to view each other’s
faith as acceptable religion, even though that has not stopped the
decades of religious violence that has marked the religious
practice in Nigeria in the country. Any other religion outside
these two is viewed with contempt or outright opposition.
Professing a lack of belief in God is even given worse
treatment.
An atheist is viewed in
Nigeria as an embodiment of the devil and everything evil. He is
believed to be an enemy that must not be associated with to avoid
infecting others with the “curse” he carries. He is not expected to
succeed in life. He is not expected to be wealthy. Even if he
acquires wealth or success “by mistake,” he is expected to lose it
soon, because it is seen as a gift from Satan. Any tragedy that
befalls him is seen as a punishment from God, and he gets little or
no sympathy. Girls would not be eager to marry him because he is an
atheist or has a different religion from Christianity and Islam. If
he has a product or service, many would refuse to patronise him, so
as not to contract the “atheist curse” that they believe he
bears.
But Nigerians
hypocritically drool over Zuckerberg. They want to be like him:
young, handsome, intelligent, super-rich. They forget that he is an
atheist. When they wake up, the first thing they do is to open
their phone and visit Zuckerberg’s business, Facebook, to read the
latest gossip and news and exchange pleasantries and quarrels with
friends and foes. If they are not on Facebook, they are on WhatsApp
or Instagram, also owned by the same atheist, Zuckerberg. If
Zuckerberg were not married, many would throw themselves at him
even before he proposed. If he were to even decide to settle in
Nigeria and become a polygamist, many Nigerian ladies would gladly
accept to be second, third or 20th wife, if he decided to acquire a
harem, despite all his atheism.
In the same vein, Nigerians
resume in their different offices and spend all their day solving
problems with Microsoft and making money through it. They do not
remember that Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft, is an agnostic,
and that his faith or lack of it has not prevented him from being
the world’s richest man and one of the greatest
philanthropists.
Similarly, Nigerians flaunt
their iPads and iPods and iPhones without remembering that Steve
Jobs was a Zen Buddhist, who – as reported by his authorised
biographer, Walter Isaacson – renounced his Christian faith after
seeing the July 1968 Life magazine with the cover photograph of
starving Biafran children. In Nigeria, Zen Buddhism would be seen
as “idol worship” because of the statues of Buddha. If Jobs were a
Nigerian and had died of cancer, many would have sneered that “God
had visited him with cancer for rejecting Christianity and
embracing idolatry.”
However, because these
people are not Nigerians, whatever they do does not matter to many
Nigerians. Just like it does not matter if a 25-year-old CNN
broadcaster calls our President – past or present – “Mr Buhari” or
“Mr Jonathan” or “Mr Obasanjo.” Our President so addressed would
accept it with a smile. But let a Nigerian broadcaster address our
President – past or present – as “ordinary Mr” and all hell would
be let loose.
“How dare you address a
whole army general or PhD holder as ordinary Mr?”
We have an intolerant
attitude towards religion. We assume that only those who practise
religion exactly the way we do have any right to be happy and
successful. Some even believe that only those who practise their
own brand of religion have a right to live.
But religion should be a
private affair. Each person is supposed to practise his or her own
religion without hindrance or discrimination while also allowing
others to practise theirs without any disturbance or
discrimination. Our lives should be the gospel people read, not our
words posturing.